Graham08
Well-known member
Hi everyone! I'm posting again after a long hiatus thanks to a gentle nudge from another member. A lot has happened since I last posted to GJ regularly, including relocating for a new job and building a new home in North Carolina.
This thread is about some work I've been doing on my buddy George's vintage supermodified race car. I've helped him with his modern sprint cars for quite a while and the whole time the coupe has been sitting in the corner of his shop. After I moved, we had a conversation about whether I might be interested in building a set of headers for the coupe if he brought it down to me from Ohio. I agreed, and have been working on the car for him in my spare time over the past couple years, in between work, building a new house, moving, and life in general.
The car is a cut-down 1934 Ford (I think) body on a home built chassis. George and his dad originally built it in 1967 and raced the car for a number of years. It was originally powered by a 292 Chevy six cylinder, and later the car was converted to a small block Chevy V8 and the chassis front-halfed at that point. George tells me they originally built the chassis by copying the photos of the Don Edmunds super that appeared in Hot Rod Magazine in the 1960s.
Here's what the car looked like when he dropped it off:
These photos were taken at the house we were renting after moving to NC.
George tells me the car has been a work in progress since it was originally built. He updated the rear suspension before bringing it down to me, but a lot of what's in the photos is just mocked up. The major change is to put the six cylinder back in since that's how a lot of people remember the car. He also has the last 292 that they raced under his bench, and he's starting the process of freshening that up.
So...the first order of business was to get the engine more permanently installed than the hose clamps that were holding it in when it got here.
At the back of the engine, this involved adding a couple crossmembers and some tabs to secure the engine plate. I think the rear engine plate is original to the car. I also took the opportunity to add a safety hoop around the torque tube.
Up front, I made some mounts from 1/4" aluminum plate to connect the engine to the chassis using the saddle mounting holes on the front of the block.
I had to add some uprights to the chassis on either side to accommodate the difference in length between the inline 6 and the V8:
Some high tech leveling devices (at one point these were part of my wife's grandfather's wine making operation):
My wife caught me doing the ol' "foot pedal between the knees" trick to weld on the bottom of the chassis:
After getting the engine secured, I had to halt progress for a bit while we moved into our new place. The coupe was the first car in the new garage, though:
More in a bit!

This thread is about some work I've been doing on my buddy George's vintage supermodified race car. I've helped him with his modern sprint cars for quite a while and the whole time the coupe has been sitting in the corner of his shop. After I moved, we had a conversation about whether I might be interested in building a set of headers for the coupe if he brought it down to me from Ohio. I agreed, and have been working on the car for him in my spare time over the past couple years, in between work, building a new house, moving, and life in general.
The car is a cut-down 1934 Ford (I think) body on a home built chassis. George and his dad originally built it in 1967 and raced the car for a number of years. It was originally powered by a 292 Chevy six cylinder, and later the car was converted to a small block Chevy V8 and the chassis front-halfed at that point. George tells me they originally built the chassis by copying the photos of the Don Edmunds super that appeared in Hot Rod Magazine in the 1960s.
Here's what the car looked like when he dropped it off:
These photos were taken at the house we were renting after moving to NC.
George tells me the car has been a work in progress since it was originally built. He updated the rear suspension before bringing it down to me, but a lot of what's in the photos is just mocked up. The major change is to put the six cylinder back in since that's how a lot of people remember the car. He also has the last 292 that they raced under his bench, and he's starting the process of freshening that up.
So...the first order of business was to get the engine more permanently installed than the hose clamps that were holding it in when it got here.
At the back of the engine, this involved adding a couple crossmembers and some tabs to secure the engine plate. I think the rear engine plate is original to the car. I also took the opportunity to add a safety hoop around the torque tube.
Up front, I made some mounts from 1/4" aluminum plate to connect the engine to the chassis using the saddle mounting holes on the front of the block.
I had to add some uprights to the chassis on either side to accommodate the difference in length between the inline 6 and the V8:
Some high tech leveling devices (at one point these were part of my wife's grandfather's wine making operation):
My wife caught me doing the ol' "foot pedal between the knees" trick to weld on the bottom of the chassis:
After getting the engine secured, I had to halt progress for a bit while we moved into our new place. The coupe was the first car in the new garage, though:
More in a bit!




